Eye Opener March 27

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Issue 8 – Saturday, March 27, 2010 An Official Publication of the Canadian Curling Association. April 2 – 10, 2011 Regina, Saskatchewan Brandt Centre – Evraz Place Sponsor of the day For tickets call 1.800.970.7328 In person at the Brandt Centre Box Office or order online German skip Andrea Schoepp handed Canada its second loss in Swift Current – both against her rink. As a result, Schoepp and her crew head to Sunday’s final, while Canada will play the winner of the Three-Four game Saturday night. ...See Page 2 Twice bitten PLUS Sweden advances with win over U.S. ...See Page 3

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The Daily Newspaper for the 2010 Ford World Womens Curling Championship in Swift Current

Transcript of Eye Opener March 27

Page 1: Eye Opener March 27

Issue 8 – Saturday, March 27, 2010 • An Official Publication of the Canadian Curling Association.Issue 8 – Saturday, March 27, 2010 • An Official Publication of the Canadian Curling Association.

April 2 – 10, 2011 Regina, Saskatchewan

Brandt Centre – Evraz Place

Sponsor of the day

For tickets call

1.800.970.7328 In person at the

Brandt Centre Box Office

or order online

German skip Andrea Schoepp handed Canada its second loss in Swift Current – both against her rink. As a result, Schoepp and her crew head to Sunday’s final, while Canada will play the winner of the Three-Four game Saturday night.

...See Page 2

Twice bitten

PLUS

Sweden advanceswith winover U.S.

...See Page 3

Page 2: Eye Opener March 27

Page 2 Eye Opener

Ninth-end explosion

A year ago at Moncton at the Ford World men’s curling champion-ship, Canada’s Kevin Martin beat

everybody in town except . . . he couldn’t beat Scotland’s David Murdoch in three tries — in the round robin, in the Page One-Two playoff, and in the champion-ship final.

Question today: Is Canada’s Jennifer Jones headed down the same path in the Ford World women’s slugfest?

Can Jones and her team lose three times to Germany’s Andrea Schoepp if, indeed, Canada gets another shot at Schoepp in the championship final?

Does lightning really and truly strike twice?

Skip Jones missed a last-rock out-turn tap-and-roll shot at a most inopportune moment Friday night at the Credit Union Iplex, yielding a huge four-ender in the ninth end to the veteran 45-year-old Schoepp, who is playing in her 17th world championship.

As are result, Schoepp executed an open last-rock hit for the killer count and won 6-3 in the championship’s Page One-Two playoff match.

The win moved Germany directly to Sunday’s championship final at 3 p.m. Canada drops to the championship semi-final today at 5 p.m. against the winner of the Page Three-Four playoff slated for 12 noon today between Scotland’s 19-year-old Eve Muirhead and Sweden’s 22-year-old Cecilia (Cissi) Ostlund.

Canada led 3-2 playing the ninth end and appeared in a safe position until Scho-epp executed an in-turn hit-and-slight-roll in the four-foot with her first stone, leaving her foe the necessary of tap-and-roll with the other turn. But Jones’s rock over-curled through a hole and made no contact. “When I made my first rock I thought we had a good chance to get out of the end because everything was so close together,” reasoned the victorious German skip.

“I thought she (Jones) looked nervous in the beginning and I thought if we could survive the first five ends we’d have a good chance as it got close to the end.”

This will be Schoepp’s first world championship final since she won the title in 1988 by defeating Heather Houston of Thunder Bay .

“For the Euros we waited 10 years to get back,” said the skip who won the 2009 Euros in December. “For the Worlds it has been more than 20. I don’t know if I’ll make again in another 20.”

Jones stole a single for a 2-0 edge in the fourth end when Schoepp was heavy on a four-foot draw. But Schoepp took a point in the sixth and stole the tying point in the seventh when Jones nosed a hit and lost he point on a measure. The Canadian skip then nestled into the button with her last rock of the eighth after traversing a nar-row port for the 3-2 advantage.

“If we rub at all we probably steal one,” said the 35-year-old Jones of her ninth-end miscue. “We needed to tap it a foot and roll in. That hole was barely big enough for a rock to go through. I don’t know, it was just bad luck.”

Jones followed the same route to win her previous world title two years ago in Vernon, losing the Page One-Two to Bingyu Wang, then rebounding to win twice.

“We’ve done it before,” she said. “It’s OK to play in the semis, it’s not a bad thing to play in the semis. It’s just disappointing to lose after I thought we controlled the whole game and we had the bad ninth end. It was sort of how it hap-pened in the round-robin game, too.

“We have to play one extra game to get where we wanted to be. Playing the semi

is never a bad thing if you win it.”Schoepp, who directed third Melanie

Robillard, second Monika Wagner and lead Corinna Scholz, said she wasn’t look-ing forward to a day while waiting to play the Sunday final.

“It’s a bad thing for me,” she said. “I like to play. I’m here for playing. I think they should look at cutting this event down. A lot of teams are going to sit around for a couple of days waiting to get home.

“I mean, why not play the game we played today and the Three-Four play-

off in the same day? Make the event one day shorter.”

As it stands, she said her team will prac-tise on the ice and “I will have a two-hour bike ride, but don’t ask where”.

Twenty-year-old lead Scholz played her sixth game of the tournament at lead on Friday. Stella Heiss, 17, also has played six times.

“Tomorrow we will decide who plays the final,” said Schoepp. “They are quite the same. I think Stella has a better feeling for the weight and Corinna is a little better on the takeouts.”

Germany puts up a four-spot in nine en route to final berth

Canadian skip Jennifer Jones not entirely happy with one of her rocks as German lead Corinna Scholz (left) and third Melanie Robillard look on in the Page One-Two game Friday.

LARRY WOODThe Eye Opener

PAGE ONE-TWO PLAYOFF CANADA vs. GERMANY

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Page 3Saturday, March 27, 2010

Official Diamond Sponsor of

Sweden’s 22-year-old Ce-cilia Ostlund loves the ag-gressive curling game. In

her short career, she has a history of employing high-risk strategy.

Take the first end of Friday’s Ford World women’s curling championship tiebreaker against Erika Brown’s Americans.

Ostlund managed to get a pair of counters jammed in the four-foot with 15 rocks in play. The Swed-ish pair was so locked in, Ostlund merely tossed her last rock away, testing an outside draw away from the crockery.

There were rocks in play, in fact, in most ends until Sweden adopted a defensive mode after smacking the Yanks with a four-ender in the sixth.

“I like that kind of game,” said an excited skip Ostlund, moments after clinching a wild 11-8 win over the U.S. to move into Satur-day’s 12-noon Page Three-Four playoff against Scotland’s Eve Muirhead.

“I like a lot of rocks in play. It’s a fun game. We know we can handle the risks involved now. I thought we played a really good game today. We gave it our all.”

The upcoming tussle will be a rematch of the world junior final at Ostersund in 2008. On the subject of wild, aggressive play, it backfired on Ostlund at that time

when Muirhead stole a six-ender en route to a 12-3 waxing. The other side of that coin? Ostlund

clobbered Muirhead 10-2 in the previous Page One-Two playoff game.

“She is aggressive, no ques-tion,” said Muirhead prior to a late Friday practice session.

“She’s a great player and to say that she’s the next Anette, I don’t think they’ve got that wrong. They fight all the way and I’m sure this is going to be a good game.”

Muirhead, who won the round-robin meeting of the two teams earlier in the week by a 7-3 score, agreed that experience might tell the tale.

“We have a lot of it on our team — Kelly (Wood) and Lorna (Vevers) who have been here about seven times and Anne Laird who won this in 2002. That should give us an advantage.

“We just have to get out and take it as it comes and see what happens.”

Ostlund tended to be a little more direct.

“It’s going to be a really tough game but I think if we play like we did today and maybe step it up just a bit we will take this next game.”

The Yanks answered Sweden’s opening deuce immediately but then failed to duck a three in the third end. It was square after five when Ostlund flashed her last looking at two.

“That one seemed to pick right out of my hand,” she said.

Then came the crushing four and the Swedes refused to relin-quish control from there.

Please see CISSI, Page 5

Swedish skip Cecilia ‘Cissi’ Ostlund (left) celebrates with her rink of Anna Carlsson, Anna Domeij andn Lotta Lennartson after beating the United States 11-8 in a tiebreaker Friday.

TIEBREAKER SWEDEN vs. USA

Cissi enjoying a Swede successLARRY WOODThe Eye Opener

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Page 4 Eye Opener

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Andrea Schoepp said Friday night she detected some nervousness in her opposi-tion — skip Jennifer Jones of Canada.

“I don’t think it has anything to do with us,” said Schoepp, who always has been known for controversial comment during curling events.

“Maybe it has to do with the pressure of knowing she has been to the Worlds four times and only won it once,” surmised Schoepp.

“I think that’s in her head, not us. I don’t think she’s concerned about us because we are not the team that should be here . . . in her mind. I just don’t think she takes us seriously. I think they are all thinking we are not such good players.

“We have seen them a lot of times and we have played them a lot of times. For me, it feels like she behaves like a profes-sional and we are persons who get around somewhere.

“It has nothing to do with a relationship between us, it’s something that’s going on the ice. It’s nothing personal. It’s just the way she’s looking at us as a curling team.”

Does Schoepp use this as a motivator?“No, I don’t care what other teams think

about me, or us. I just have to get myself and my team ready for the moments when we have to play good and to make the shot at the time when its necessary.”

Schoepp said she is known as “a bad person” back home, and not only in Ger-many.

“I’m really proud of Corinna (Scholz who divides time at the lead position) because she came into this team new this season and here we are in another final. The first ‘spiel we played in she was nervous like crazy because everybody told her I was such a bad person.”

Why?“Maybe because I’m honest and mostly

say what I’m thinking,” said Schoepp. “I think that could be a problem for some curlers.”

LARRY WOODThe Eye Opener

Schoepp says her team isn’t taken seriously

German skip Andrea Schoepp.

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PHARMASAVE_EyeOpener_DAY-4-8.pdf 1/14/10 4:40:19 PM

CITYofSC_EyeOpener_DAY8.pdf 1/14/10 4:50:07 PM

“She made a lot of doubles,” said Brown. “Three, maybe four. But I guess I left them for her. She made some great shots.”

Ostlund’s key double in the sixth, an an-gle-raise effort, gave her the four-ender.

Her third player, Sara Carlsson, execut-ed a brilliant double-peel in he last end to erase any hope Brown had for setting up the stolen deuce she required. Carls-son was scored at 90 per cent on her third rocks.

“We got lucky in the fifth when he missed and we thought it would give us some new life,” said Brown. “But, unfor-tunately, that lasted for about 15 rocks. We made a lot of good shots but just not enough. Cissi came out real tough.”

Brown said she looks forward to a break from the game but will return to skip a team next year.

“Right now, 24 games in three weeks is a lot for my legs to handle,” she said.

From Page 3

CISSI: Third Carlsson made big shots

It was a tough tiebreaker for Erika Brown and her American crew who gave up a couple of big ends to Cecilia Ostlund’s Swedish rink and chased the Scandina-vians all afternoon.

Page 6: Eye Opener March 27

Page 6 Eye Opener

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Jennifer Jones curled 82% in Friday’s Page One-Two playoff.

Page 7: Eye Opener March 27

Page 7Saturday, March 27, 2010

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Several national curling federations, including his home CCA, should be on the alert.

Montreal’s Dan Rafael, the guy who coached the Chinese women’s curling team to World gold, Universiade gold and Olympic bronze, most likely will be on the loose come July 1.

“I was asked the question at the Olympics,” Rafael recalls. “Are you going to continue to coach the Chinese after the Olympics? And the answer got me in so much trouble.

“I said, ‘I don’t know because after June 30, I’m done’.”Which is to say, that’s when his contract runs out. “Then the news hits the next day that I was quitting in

the middle of the Olympics,” says Rafael. “Why? Because somebody heard me say, ‘I’m done’.

“We got phone calls from China saying, ‘We can’t have our national coach quitting in the middle of the Olympics’. I said, ‘What?’ They wanted to know, why would I do that? I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ I told them, ‘I have val-ues, I honour my contracts, things would have to be really bad for me to quit’. But not one story used the word ‘done’. They all said I was quitting.”

Fact of the matter is, Chinese sports operate on the quadrennial basis in terms of preparing athletes, appointing bureaucrats, hiring coaches.

“Now the Winter Olympics are finished so at the end of this season all those administrative positions are up for re-appointment, selection, whatever,” says Rafael.

“The guy who hires you can’t do so for longer than the four-year term. And there’s no point talking to him about extensions because he doesn’t know if he’ll be back beyond the same term.

“So, basically, at the end of June, I’ll be in the same posi-tion I was in before. Which is, by the time anybody might want to hire me, I may be gone somewhere else. Because, if somebody else offers me something else, I won’t wait. Especially if its closer to home.

“I don’t want to travel like this any more. The first year alone, I was home 11 days in 10 months. This year, I haven’t calculated it but it’d be less. And, anyway, I don’t even know when those appointments in China are going to be made beyond July 1.”

Rafael has enjoyed meteoric success with the Bingyu Wang team. And coaching is curling has become a big-time necessity. The banging on Rafael’s door should start any time now.

Check that. It already has started.

“Yeah, I have spoken to another country that’s closer to home than China,” he admits. “And I was offered Curling Quebec. I can always go back there. To go back to China, there’d have to be a lot of changes. Like you’re away from home for 10 months. You can’t pay a person enough for that.”

And not only that . . .“It’s not just teaching them (Chinese) curling,” he says.

“There may be something that you want to change and there’s no chance in hell. You’re dealing with changing 5,000 years of culture overnight? They have to hire some-body who understands both the game and the nation’s culture — someone who wants to spend a lot of time trying to find a middle ground for everything.”

Rafael always has been concerned that some of his coach-ing methods weren’t getting through to the players.

“That’s par for the course,” he says. “You have a translator who’s a curling coach. And a lot of times the translation is directed to the player but, while the player will get the trans-lation correctly, she may not get the meaning. In coaching, a lot of times we use metaphors and stories and they’ll get the story but they still won’t know what I’m talking about or why I’m telling them this story.

“I’ve been around some of the sports venues and summer competitions in Beijing, including the Olympics, watching the basketball and volleyball and whatever, and in every case when there was a Chinese team with a foreign coach they had a translator attached to that coach and that’s all

he did was translate. My problem always has been that my translation is handled by a Chinese curling coach. So does he actually try to convey the message I’m trying to give or does he filter it? I don’t know. I’ll never know because the situation isn’t going to change.

“I think they’ve felt threatened by me since Day One. They may get really insulted by this but . . . the feeling I get is there’s a lot of mistrust between players, between coaches, nobody trusts anybody.

“When I first started with them in September, 2007, they came to me with a pile of DVDs and they asked, ‘Can you analyze these games that we’ve played’? I said, ‘There’s quite a few of them there, I won’t be able to do them all now, can you get me copies’? And they looked at me rather aghast. ‘You want copies?’

“They’d never give me copies because they’re fearful I might go coach Japan and have all the Chinese secrets because I have copies of their games. Sure, that thinking is pretty funny to us. But I still haven’t seen a copy of any game. I have to get my own.

Please see RAFAEL, Page 10

LARRY WOODEye Opener Editor

Is this where coach, China part ways?With contract expiring June 30 and a four-year-cycle system, Dan Rafael’s days as national coach could be over

Page 8: Eye Opener March 27

Page 8 The Party Line • Your guide to what’s goin’ on

your guide to what’s goin’ on

Complementary shuttle buses - provided by Tim Hortons and the City of Swift Current - offer transportation between the Credit Union i-plex and destinations throughout the city.

The complete schedule will be at the Information Booth.

Take a Free RideToday bus runs begin at the Credit Union i-plex at the bottom of the hour from 10:30 am to 1:00 am.

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All week the Cool Curling championship has been entertaining the crowds in Keith’s Patch, with a new competition played every day.

The daily winners have each received a $100 cash prize along with the right to advance to the finals – taking place today between 3:00 and 5:00 pm. The elite eight teams from the week’s action will be back at the table to compete for the grand prize.

The champions take home another $100, plus ownership of the official Cool Curling table. The second place team receives a $100 cash award.

The eight finalists are:

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Debbie and Ernie Boker, Mankato, SKGarry Stahn and Stan Haug, Assiniboia, SKJade and Jacy Telke, Cabri, SKGrayson and Brenda Knutson, Pennant, SK

Fern Walker and Wendy Hale, Abbey, SKCarrie and Jerry Olson, Dunmore ABBrad and Gale Dickie, Pennant, SKMickey Wallace & Jason Senicar, Swift Current

Page 9: Eye Opener March 27

Page 9Saturday, March 27, 2010

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Page 10: Eye Opener March 27

Page 10 Eye Opener

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There was a time, too, when the Chinese players were kept under a tight rein where the media was concerned.

“She (Wang) is a lot better at understanding now and she’d probably be a lot better yet if she was let loose,” says Rafael. “But they put a pretty tight rein on the girls. When I first started, any time somebody wanted to talk to them there were official concerns. None of the players were allowed to talk to the media for fear that they didn’t know what to say. They wouldn’t know what they were allowed to say, what was right, what was wrong, what could be misinterpreted. It’s a lot better now than it was then.”

Rafael was asked during The Olympics: ‘Do you think the Chinese sys-tem would work for Canadians’?

“I said, “Absolutely not! Do you think a Canadian would want to be told what time to get up in the morning, what time to eat breakfast, what time the bus is coming, what time to go to sleep? From that answer, I got in trouble, because they told me I shouldn’t be telling everybody how we manage our team. I said, ‘Yeah, but they asked me the question’. It seems that, whether it’s right or wrong, they don’t want people to know.”

Rafael’s next assignment, and it may be his last as Chinese coach, won’t be with the men’s team in Cortina d’Ampezzo next week. He’ll be in Hei-longjiang province in the north of China, in the big cities of Harbin, Qiqihar and Daqing. Apparently the province has put pressure on the Chinese Curling Association to hold a clinic for icemakers, officials, umpires and coaches.

“The problem I probably got into — and I learned this the first year — is that I signed for more than one year,” Rafael says. “I met a speed skating coach over there from Calgary who asked me how long I was going to do this, and I told him, ‘two years’. He said, ‘Oh. Normally we only sign for one year at a time’.

“In hindsight, I think that’s the better way to do it. The thing is, you sign for two you have no control, you have to wait out your two years. Or quit. And if you quit you get a bad reputation.

“It’s also monetary. In any other country that I know, if you win the world championship, the world university games and so on, you’d be in line for a bonus of some sort. But not with China. The bonus in China is for Olympic gold. Nothing else. You win bronze, it means nothing.”

From Page 7

RAFAEL: Bronze means nothing

China’s coach Dan Rafael of Montreal explains strategy to Bingyu Wang and her rink.

Page 11: Eye Opener March 27

Page 11Saturday, March 27, 2010

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QUESTIoN oF THE dayHow many Canadian-born players are performing for other teams in the current WCC?

1. Names, please.

2. The place of birth in Canada and the nation and position played?

3. Name the U.S. skip who has com-piled the most WCC victories.

4. How many wins?

5. Name the only skip in the history of the world women’s curling cham-pionship to win 10 or more games three times at the championship?

6. Her home nation?

7. Name four other skips who have twice won 10 or more games at the world women’s championship.

8. They’re home nations?

9. Name the first Canadian skip to lose four games at the world wom-en’s curling championship.

10. That was in what year and where?

11. Name any player in the current world women’s championship (includ-ing alternates) who previously won a world junior women’s championship.

12. How about the year (years) of the junior championships and the posi-tions they played. Qofd: One Canadian-born player is

paying for another team.

1. Melanie Robillard

2. Robillard was born in Sussex, N.B. and plays third for Germany.

3. Debbie McCormick

4. 35 wins.

5. Elisabet Gustafson.

6. Sweden.

7. Marilyn Bodogh, Anette Norberg, Sandra Schmirler, Bingyu Wang

8. Bodogh and Schmirler (Canada), Norberg (Sweden), Wang (China).

9. Lindsay Sparkes.

10. 1979 at Perth, Scotland.

11. Linn Githmark, Liudmila Privivkova, Ekaterina Galkina, Margarita Fomina, Sarah Reid, Eve Muirhead (3).

12. Githmark skipped the 2004 world junior champ, Privivkova (skip), Galkina (third), Fimina (second) won the 2006 world junior title, Reid skipped the 2007 world champion, Muirhead played third in 2007 and skipped the 2008 and 2009 world junior champions.

Time out for Ford World

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Page 12: Eye Opener March 27

Page 12 Eye Opener

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Draft: Draft 1

Date: December 8, 2009

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Ford World Women’s Curling 2010

PropRes Ford Curling 2010 Ad1.indd 1 12/8/09 10:15:27 AM

2010 FORD WORLD WOMEN’S POSTER GIRL

EVE MUIRHEADSKIP • SCOTLAND

Page 13: Eye Opener March 27

Page 13Saturday, March 27, 2010

THE ROUND-ROBIN STATISTICAL STORY

TEAM PERCENTAGES Draw 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 AVG Teams1 Canada ** 79 ** 91 84 ** 86 84 89 ** 96 91 81 ** 90 ** 91 872 Scotland 82 ** 83 ** 84 79 ** 77 89 81 ** ** 76 83 ** 81 86 823 Germany 83 ** 81 ** 77 85 ** 74 82 86 ** ** 80 81 ** 84 81 813 China 82 ** 75 ** 78 89 ** 82 84 78 ** ** 80 82 ** 75 82 813 Denmark 81 ** 79 ** 84 81 ** 78 85 79 ** ** 85 84 ** 76 75 816 Sweden ** 75 ** 83 78 ** 87 72 72 ** 84 92 84 ** 76 ** 72 807 Russia 79 88 ** 65 ** 78 79 ** ** 88 77 78 ** 81 77 82 ** 798 Switzerland ** 71 ** 87 77 ** 82 67 85 ** 75 79 73 ** 82 ** 75 788 United States 75 83 ** 74 ** 84 77 ** ** 82 73 80 ** 80 72 81 ** 7810 Norway ** 75 ** 79 68 ** 76 77 80 ** 83 76 84 ** 76 ** 74 7711 Japan 75 82 ** 59 ** 73 79 ** ** 66 67 75 ** 79 81 78 ** 7412 Latvia 65 77 ** 65 ** 68 69 ** ** 67 69 81 ** 57 80 78 ** 71** = did not play

LEADS Draw Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 AVG+ Jennifer Clark-Rouire CAN ** ** ** ** ** ** 100 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 100+ Binia Feltscher SUI ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 94 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 941 Dawn Askin CAN ** 91 ** 88 92 ** 95 90 94 ** 98 98 84 ** 89 ** 90 91+ Jessica Schultz USA ** ** ** 90 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 902 Ekaterina Galkina RUS 99 95 ** 73 ** 75 91 ** ** 98 91 88 ** 97 80 86 ** 892 Yan Zhou CHN 94 ** 89 ** 89 97 ** 89 84 92 ** ** 81 90 ** 88 84 894 Camilla Jensen DEN 95 ** 77 ** 88 89 ** 88 89 91 ** ** 93 83 ** 86 77 87+ Corinna Scholz GER ** ** ** ** 88 ** ** 80 ** 90 ** ** ** 88 ** ** 80 85+ Marisa Winkelhausen SUI ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 75 ** ** 83 90 ** ** 85 ** ** 845 Laura Hallisey USA 74 77 ** 80 ** 90 80 ** ** 94 79 81 ** 90 80 79 ** 835 Lotta Lennartsson SWE ** 80 ** 83 85 ** 93 83 78 ** 73 92 81 ** 81 ** 84 835 Anne Laird SCO 77 ** 95 ** 77 89 ** 66 81 90 ** ** 80 80 ** 84 93 835 Zanda Bikse LAT 71 78 ** ** ** 80 97 ** ** ** 80 90 ** 83 93 ** ** 835 Sandra Ramstein-Attinger SUI ** 86 ** 89 89 ** 86 63 ** ** ** ** 70 ** ** ** 88 8310 Kristin Skaslien NOR ** 79 ** 81 73 ** 76 92 90 ** 81 79 87 ** 85 ** 76 8210 Kotomi Ishizaki JPN 79 82 ** 61 ** 86 ** ** ** ** ** 93 ** 94 80 85 ** 8210 Stella Heiss GER 81 ** 81 ** ** 75 ** ** 86 ** ** ** 81 ** ** 89 ** 82+ Anna Ohmiya JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** 82 ** ** 86 76 ** ** ** ** ** ** 81+ Dace Munca LAT ** ** ** 50 ** ** 57 ** ** 73 ** ** ** ** ** 75 ** 64

SECONDSDraw 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 AVG

1 Jill Officer CAN ** 83 ** 96 73 ** 78 74 90 ** 100 80 80 ** 90 ** 88 852 Monika Wagner GER 89 ** 83 ** 81 93 ** 75 89 81 ** ** 80 78 ** 86 81 833 Angelina Jensen DEN 78 ** 77 ** 86 91 ** 80 89 75 ** ** 89 85 ** 76 75 823 Lorna Vevers SCO 83 ** 83 ** 89 70 ** 72 92 83 ** ** 79 81 ** 78 90 825 Nkeiruka Ezekh RUS 80 89 ** 67 ** 89 84 ** ** 78 56 93 ** 81 79 89 ** 816 Ann Swisshelm USA 86 95 ** 68 ** 85 80 ** ** 80 75 81 ** 79 70 86 ** 806 Ingrid Stensrud NOR ** 81 ** 88 69 ** 70 84 82 ** 80 85 88 ** 78 ** 80 808 Qingshuang Yue CHN 81 ** 77 ** 75 92 ** 81 90 72 ** ** 75 76 ** 73 80 799 Anna Domeij SWE ** 73 ** 82 71 ** 86 63 75 ** 91 94 88 ** 74 ** 63 78+ Mayo Yamaura JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** 91 ** ** 75 68 ** ** ** 77 ** ** 78+ Mari Motohashi JPN 70 89 ** 70 ** 89 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 7810 Heike Schwaller SUI ** 61 ** 90 73 ** 76 91 86 ** 61 84 65 ** 81 ** 83 7711 Ieva Krusta LAT 56 78 ** 79 ** 67 63 ** ** 79 67 81 ** ** 81 88 ** 74+ Anna Ohmiya JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 75 ** 69 ** 78 ** 74+ Liudmila Privivkova RUS ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 88 60 ** ** ** ** ** 74+ Una Grava-Germane LAT ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 67 ** ** ** 67+ Sarah Reid SCO ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 25 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 25

** = did not play + = player unranked due to insufficient games THIRDS Draw 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 AVG1 Cathy Overton-Clapham CAN ** 76 ** 88 91 ** 79 95 88 ** 95 89 86 ** 86 ** 96 882 Sara Carlsson SWE ** 79 ** 92 83 ** 88 77 78 ** 86 91 85 ** 70 ** 77 823 Denise Dupont DEN 77 ** 83 ** 84 79 ** 80 86 71 ** ** 92 81 ** 64 90 814 Melanie Robillard GER 85 ** 68 ** 78 86 ** 66 84 89 ** ** 80 85 ** 78 78 804 Kelly Wood SCO 83 ** 69 ** 83 63 ** 84 93 81 ** ** 73 83 ** 84 83 80+ Liudmila Privivkova RUS 78 83 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 806 Corinne Bourquin SUI ** 80 ** 94 71 ** 88 63 ** ** ** ** 73 ** 91 ** 67 79+ Marisa Winkelhausen SUI ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 79 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 797 Yin Liu CHN 86 ** 73 ** 78 77 ** 74 86 78 ** ** 78 80 ** 75 73 788 Henriette Lovar NOR ** 75 ** 86 69 ** 80 78 76 ** 75 73 88 ** 70 ** 73 77+ Binia Feltscher SUI ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 81 70 ** ** ** ** ** 769 Maragrita Fomina RUS ** ** ** 66 ** 70 72 ** ** 86 75 68 ** 80 80 70 ** 7410 Nina Spatola USA 75 77 ** 74 ** 74 69 ** ** 66 64 79 ** 80 71 80 ** 73+ Mari Motohashi JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 59 66 ** 80 85 73 ** 73+ Moe Meguro JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** 78 ** ** 64 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 7111 Una Grava-Germane LAT 56 75 ** 61 ** 59 69 ** ** 65 81 78 ** ** 71 79 ** 70+ Anna Ohmiya JPN 70 89 ** 56 ** 75 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 70+ Ieva Krusta LAT ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 48 ** ** ** 48

** = did not play + = player unranked due to insufficient games

SKIPS Draw 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 AVG1 Jennifer Jones CAN ** 68 ** 91 78 ** 93 76 85 ** 93 95 74 ** 93 ** 92 852 Eve Muirhead SCO 87 ** 85 ** 88 93 ** 88 89 81 ** ** 74 89 ** 79 78 843 Andrea Schopp GER 75 ** 91 ** 59 85 ** 75 70 84 ** ** 79 72 ** 82 87 784 Erika Brown USA 64 84 ** 71 ** 89 80 ** ** 87 75 79 ** 69 66 76 ** 764 Bingyu Wang CHN 65 ** 63 ** 70 89 ** 84 76 69 ** ** 86 82 ** 64 89 764 Cecilia Ostlund SWE ** 68 ** 76 74 ** 81 67 57 ** 88 91 82 ** 80 ** 64 76+ Corinne Bourquin SUI ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 81 ** 75 72 ** ** ** ** ** 767 Madeleine Dupont DEN 73 ** 78 ** 80 66 ** 66 78 80 ** ** 65 85 ** 79 59 738 Anna Sidorova RUS 58 88 ** 56 ** 79 69 ** ** 89 64 79 ** 65 68 81 ** 729 Linn Githmark NOR ** 63 ** 63 59 ** 78 53 71 ** 97 68 73 ** 70 ** 68 6910 Moe Meguro JPN 81 66 ** 50 ** 41 ** ** ** ** 64 64 ** 75 82 78 ** 6810 Binia Feltscher SUI ** 54 ** 75 76 ** 76 44 ** ** ** ** 83 ** 71 ** 62 6812 Iveta Stasa-Sarsune LAT 75 78 ** 70 ** 67 68 ** ** 50 47 74 ** 31 76 71 ** 66+ Mari Motohashi JPN ** ** ** ** ** ** 63 ** ** 39 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 51

** = did not play+ = player unranked due to insufficient games

Canada led the round-robin in team percentage with 87.

Askin

Zhou

Galkina

Jensen

Officer

Jensen

Wagner

Vevers

Overton-Clapham

Dupont

Carlsson

Robillard

Jones

Schoepp

Muirhead

Brown

Page 14: Eye Opener March 27

Page 14 Eye Opener

SCORE

You Manage the Game Plan,We’ll Manage the Road Trip!

0 1 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

2 0 0

1301 North ServiceRoad East

Swift Current, SKS9H 3X6Phone:

(306) 773-8288Fax:

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holidayinnexpress.com

TODAY12 noon. Page Three-Four playoff Scotland vs. Swe-den

5 p.m. Championship semi-final. Canada vs. winner of Page Three-Four game.

SUNDAY10 a.m. Bronze-medal match. Semi-final loser vs. loser of Page Three-Four playoff.

3 p.m. Gold-medal champi-onship final. Germany vs. Semi-final winner.

Final Round Robin Standings

TIEBREAKER Results 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 TSweden* 2 o 3 0 0 4 0 1 0 1 11USA 0 2 0 1 2 0 1 0 2 0 8%age Lead Second Third Skip TeamSweden 84 71 90 74 80USA 79 66 68 64 69

\

PAGE 1/2 GAME Results 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 TCanada 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 x 3Germany 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4 x 6%age Lead Second Third Skip TeamCanada 85 81 89 82 84Germany 75 74 76 91 79

* —started game with the hammer

Draw Schedule

Team W L1. Canada *10 12. Germany *8 3

3. Scotland 8 3

T4. Sweden 7 4T4. U.S.A. 7 4

Team W LChina 6 5Denmark 6 5Russia 5 6Norway 3 8Switzerland 3 8Japan 2 9 Latvia 1 10

USA second Ann Swisshelm (left) and lead Laura Hallisey sweep in the tiebreaker against Sweden Friday. Sweden advanced with an 11-8 win.

Team Sweden celebrates success.

German third Melanie Robillard throws while Canadian lead Dawn Askin looks on in the Page One -Two game.

Page 15: Eye Opener March 27

Page 15Saturday, March 27, 2010

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Amarula is the official spirit of the Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Tim Hortons Brier and Ford Wold Women’s Curling Championship.

Please visit www.amarula.com to learn more. Amarula is a rare find. Appreciate it accordingly.

The Official Spirit of Championship Curling

The creamy consistency of Amarula delights with lingering subtle flavours of vanilla, caramel, and chocolate.

Affirming its unrivaled taste, Amarula Cream was recently voted “Best Liqueur in the World” at the International Wine and Spirit Competition.

Curling fans have flocked to the Ford World Women’s Curling Championship in Swift Current. After Friday night’s Page One-Two game, a total of 42,112 have taken in the action at the Iplex.

Page 16: Eye Opener March 27

Page 16 Eye Opener

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A year from now, the World women’s curling championship will resurface in Esbjerg, Den-mark.

Where?Esbjerg is a port city of 115,000 on the west coast of

Jutland, the peninsula that forms the bulk of the Danish country. It’s the fifth largest city in the country.

Denmark never before has staged a world champion-ship, women’s or men’s. But this one — March 19-27, 2011 — promises to be a treat of a different order.

For the record, the city of Esbjerg was established in 1868 as a replacement for the harbour in Altona, which had previously been Denmark’s most important North Sea harbour. In 1874, Esbjerg was connected by rail to Fredericia and Varde.

The city has been voted “City of the Year” twice. The first time was in 1997 where the city was awarded the title because of the corporate work between public and private companies. In 2006, the city was again awarded “City of the Year” honours. The second award was given due to the work and support of young talents. The talents in sport, artwork and music have been given good sup-port and given the best facilities to develop their talent even further.

The city holds an annual music festival spanning two weekends during mid-August and is focused around the central Torvet Square. The festival celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2006.

The Esbjerg airport is one of the most accessible in Denmark, just 10 kilometres from the city centre.

Close to Esbjerg you will find vast expanses of beach-es, nature experiences, amusement parks and medieval towns. In fact, Denmark’s oldest town Ribe is situated only 30 kilometres distant.

The city is loaded with restaurants, cafés, bars and dis-cotheques. It’s Performing Arts Centre is designed by the world-famous architect of the Sydney Opera House, Jørn Utzon. In 1996, Denmark’s largest swimming stadium and tropical swimscape opened in the centre of the city.

Danish port city hosting 2011 eventLARRY WOODThe Eye Opener

Top, Esbjerg, Denmark, population 115,000. Lower, left, the Esbjerg Arena, home of EfB IShockey of the Danish league. Right, The Four White Men, four large statues staring out into the harbour welcom-ing visitors as a navigational beacon.